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Friday, November 30, 2012

The “Sudan Problem” has not gone away with the South’s secession. Chronic conflict, driven by concentration of power and resources in the centre, continues to plague the country. The solution is a more inclusive government that addresses at least some of the peripheries’ grievances, but pledges to transform governance remain unfulfilled. A key hurdle – though not the only one – is President Bashir, who has further concentrated authority in a small circle of trusted officials and is unwilling to step aside. Many hope for regime change via coup but have not considered the dangers. The goal should be managed transition to a government that includes, but is not dominated by his National Congress Party (NCP). He might be willing to go along if he concludes greater disorder or even a coup is growing more likely, but only if the right incentives are in place. The international community should contribute to these provided a credible and inclusive transitional government, a meaningful national dialogue on a new constitution and a roadmap for permanent change in how Sudan is governed are first put firmly in train.

The regime in Khartoum is in crisis, faced with multiple challenges that, combined, profoundly threaten its existence and Sudan’s stability. The economy is in a freefall that any oil deal with South Sudan will only slow, not arrest. NCP members are deeply unhappy with the leadership, its policies and massive corruption. Feuding factions within the ruling party and the Islamic movement are jockeying to present an acceptable alternative to the NCP government. At the same time, political opposition forces are growing more assertive, and the war with the Sudan Revolutionary Front (SRF) is slowly expanding, bleeding the military dry and draining the treasury.

Many hope a coup, or popular uprising, could force Bashir and the NCP regime out, but there is a great risk that either event could trigger more violence. Since he came to power in a military coup in 1989, he has deliberately fragmented the security services and frequently rotated commanders to make an army takeover more difficult. Unless commanders are united, the army could easily split into competing factions. There are also a host of other security services and armed militias loyal to different NCP leaders. Added to this combustible mix are numerous armed tribes outside of Khartoum that would seek to take advantage of turmoil in the capital to create facts on the ground difficult for a new regime to reverse.

Bashir and the NCP likely recognise that the dangers of the present phase are greater than the social and economic troubles they have survived in the past. Their instincts are to cut a deal with the fractured opposition (ceding some power and resources to one or two of the political parties and/or a major armed group) and take advantage of the partial settlement with South Sudan to get the oil flowing again. But that can only buy more time, not resolve the causes of chronic conflict or stop the spreading civil war.

The international community should learn the lessons of past failed settlement initiatives: Sudan needs a truly comprehensive peace agreement, not a partial settlement that serves the government’s divide-and-rule tactics and perpetuates the unacceptable status quo. At the same time, the NCP needs to be part of any transition. Leaving it out in the cold would be costly. Its elites are too powerful to ignore, and the opposition is too divided and inexperienced to rule alone. A comprehensive solution and genuine political reform including national reconciliation acceptable to all, with the NCP on board, is the only way out of the trap of endless conflict.

The president and his colleagues will have to reach their own conclusion that the present crisis requires more radical adjustments than those they used for survival previously. If they do, however, the international community, by providing incentives, can help them to act on that conclusion consequentially and responsibly. These should be carefully tied to Bashir and the NCP meeting specific, irreversible benchmarks, such as those Crisis Group set out as early as 2009, and verifiably continuing the transition process. Such cooperation might be unpalatable to many who hold Bashir responsible for atrocity crimes, but it would be necessary to prevent further conflict and continued humanitarian crises in Sudan as well as South Sudan. He is crucial to a managed transition that incorporates both the NCP and opposition leaders – civil and armed – and that could put Sudan on a more inclusive, sustainable path. The alternative would be continuation of the status quo, with the NCP desperately clinging to power at whatever humanitarian cost, and the opposition pursuing a military strategy that risks more national fragmentation.

Most Sudanese know what is necessary to end decades of conflict. Even before independence in 1956, it was clear that power and resources should be shared more equitably with marginalised regions. The historical focus was often on South Sudan, but other areas have suffered as well. At different times, most peripheral regions have risen in armed revolt to demand greater representation and more development. This dynamic will not change unless there is fundamental structural reform of how the country is governed, and all its political forces – the NCP, the traditional parties, the SRF and youth groups – work together to create a more inclusive and representative government that accepts and respects the tremendous diversity of the Sudanese peoples.

RECOMMENDATIONS

To achieve an inclusive transitional government and initiation of meaningful and verifiable national dialogue

To the Government of Sudan:

1. Bring the NCP, opposition forces and
civil society together in an arrangement to manage government for a
limited period with well-defined parameters (based on agreed principles
reiterated in multiple agreements over decades) that is intended to lead
first and foremost to a comprehensive ceasefire and humanitarian access
to conflict areas, as well as to allow the political forces to come
together to flesh out a roadmap for a durable peace process.

2. Create a process that includes armed and unarmed political forces from all regions to:

a) debate and agree on a system of
governance that can put an end to the conflicts between the
“centre-Khartoum” and Darfur, Southern Kordofan, Blue Nile, East and
North; and

c) holding all government forces and
associated militias accountable for their violations of international
humanitarian law; and

d) amending the provisions in the police
law, the criminal law and the criminal procedural law that give the
police and security personnel immunity.

To the Sudan Revolutionary Front (SRF) and Political Opposition Forces:

4. Subordinate individual ambitions in
order to develop and articulate detailed political platforms and visions
that can form the framework for the transition process.

5. Work to broaden the opposition’s support base and popular support for a transitional framework.

To assist in ending conflict and building sustainable peace and reform

To the Republic of South Sudan:

6. Urge the SRF and other opposition
forces to recognise that a managed transition is much preferable to a
coup or violent regime change and their likely attendant chaos.

7. Encourage the SRF to develop a detailed political platform and work with other opposition forces.

To Members of the UN Security Council, AU Peace and Security Council and Council of the League of Arab States:

8. Demand and work for a single, comprehensive solution to Sudan’s multiple conflicts.

9. Offer President Omar al-Bashir, as well
as NCP elites, incentives to create a transitional government and
firmly and irreversibly place Sudan on a transitional path, including:

a) assistance to stabilise the economy,
such as normalisation of relations, lifting of sanctions, expediting
Highly Indebted Poor Country (HPIC) status and other debt relief
measures, on condition that transition roadmap benchmarks are met and
progress is made in negotiations with South Sudan on post-separation
issues; and

b) If concrete moves towards a credible
transition process are undertaken, and should it emerge as a genuine
obstacle to its peaceful conclusion, a Security Council request to the
International Criminal Court (ICC) to defer prosecution of Bashir for
one year under Article 16 of the Rome Statute. There would be no
obligation to renew such deferrals if Bashir reneges on his transition
commitments.

10. Support through training and capacity
building during the transitional period the establishment and growth of
issue-based parties that can represent and articulate the demands of
marginalised constituencies, including the peripheries, youth, women and
urban and rural poor.

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